On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 12:30:41PM -0800, mike wrote: > On Sun, 21 Mar 2004 10:23:02 -0000, Roland Dunn wrote > > Hi, > > > > Anyone had any experience of installing netatalk on Debian (Woody)? > > I have read that it requires a kernel recompile but wondered > > whether this is truly the case? Is it not possibly as simple as apt- > > get netatalk? > Its as simple as that. > # apt-get install netatalk > > > > > I've installed the idepci version of DEBIAN (Woody) - anyone know if > > netatalk installed in any of the other ver's? E.g. vanilla, or bf24? > Should work. > > > Incidentally, where can one find the list of packages that one can > > supply to apt-get as parameter? netatalk might not be the correct > > package name, but I'm unsure how to find out what is the correct name. > > You can use apt to search packages and package info. > For example: > # apt-cache search netatalk > or > # apt-cache search apple |more > Once you have your package name: > # apt-cache show netatalk > > Note: If your running OSX clients, you may want to look at the netatalk > package from sarge or sid. >
I'm running OSX on one iMac and OS 9.2 on another. Both access two Debian machines, one running Woody, the other running Sarge. Both netatalk are strictly "out of the box" installations. Out of the box, each person who is a known user of a Debian host can access files in his home directory on that Debian host. If you want to have the Macs access to anything besides the home directory of a single user of a Debian box, you need to edit the netatalk config file in order to tell it what else should be accessable. I've never done that, but I'm sure its not hard. Debian netatalk is much easier to set up than RedHat was the last time I did it a few years ago. -- Paul E Condon [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

